"​ Kamal Sabri, probably the best sarangi (Indian violin) player in the world, plays some heartbreaking tunes." Variety, USA"On his way to the Top"National Herald, India"Clad in jeans and a cool tee, talking about his love for cricket and travelling, this sarangi player, son of Ustad Sabri Khan, the seventh in the generation of a well-known clan of musicians, is quite unlike an exponent of classical Indian music." Times of India"Youthful maestro" Trinidad Guardian, TrinidadStunning magical performance"- Helsingin Sanomat, Finland"Fingers, dancing complex patterns on Sarangi strings" Birmingham Post, UK"While father Sabri Khan perfected the khat khatka style to suit his vocalists, and the gayaki ang for solo renditions, his son Kamal has radicalised the instrument itself by tuning a guitar string in place of the traditional gut string. "The Hindu"Kamal was impressive. His playing managed to give goosebumps like the Thoughts and Beats CD of Sultan Khan and Zakir Hussain. Kamal is an interesting subject for scrutiny. He's young, 25 years old to be exact, he comes from the Sainia Gharana of music and is seventh in line of a family tree that shows sarangi players from top to bottom. He has a rather modern outlook because of his age, but at the same time tradition is very close to his heart. He learnt under the tutelage of his father, Ustad Sabri Khan, who is a progressive sarangi player and has won the Padmashree award in India. Homegrown, but open to ideas, Ustad Sabri Khan has played with Pandit Ravi Shankar and Yehudi Menuhin from the classical lot and with The Beatles" The News, Índia